Don't let Shooter Jennings fool you. Sure, he rocks. He's lean and wiry, with tattoos snaking up his arms – his mother's name on one, a gun on the other – and a crimson stud gleaming in one ear. He's played sold-out shows at the Viper Room and the Roxy. He's subbed for Axl Rose onstage – twice – with Guns N' Roses.
But look a little closer. Underneath that gun are the letters CBCS, for "country boy can survive." That earring turns out to be an eagle silhouette spreadwinged into the letter "W" – an icon known by anyone who has listened to and loved the original outlaw, Waylon Jennings.
That same icon is etched onto Shooter's stomach, but the one in his ear is even more special.
"My dad got his ear pierced when he was – I swear to God – sixty, because he wanted to be like me," the younger Jennings explains. "This was the earring he wore – and I'm wearing it now."
If that's not enough to make it clear that bloodlines run deep from father to son, then check out Shooter's debut album, PUT THE ‘O’ BACK IN COUNTRY. The passion on "Southern Comfort," scraped raw from the walls of some backwoods church … the guitars on "Daddy's Farm," stacked, harmonized and slathered in deep-fried soul … "4th of July," a crank-it-up summer celebration sweetened by a sprinkling of George Jones … the treadshredding, back-road, hairpin spin of "Busted in Baylor County" … and, above all, "Put the 'O' Back in Country," which jabs a finger in the eye of everything that's wrong with America's music today … Hoss, it's country music, the way it ought to be – alive with blood and thunder, spit and spirit and Southern soul.
Waylon fought this battle in his own way, back in the day. But the sun has sunk and the shadows have spread deeper across country music since then. And as cowboy poseurs roam this dim and dreary land, Shooter sets it ablaze with an affirmation that country music – real country music – is back. And this time it's not going away. "The main thing I want people to understand is that I'm a country artist," Shooter says. "Sure, there's rock in there. I've played a lot of rock & roll. I take a lot from it. But it's country music. And I'm going to push it as far as I can because it's that important."
"I'm rollin' like a freight train, comin' straight at you/I'm playin' hillbilly music, like I was born to do/You know, it ain't country music you've been listenin' to." – "Put the 'O' Back in Country" Waylon Albright Jennings was born rollin'. The only child of Waylon Jennings and Jessi Colter, he lived his first few years in a crib on his parents' tour bus. "I thought everybody's family was like mine," he remembers. "We'd check out of hotels and travel all night. Songwriting, shows, stage setups, the band, the crew, the bus, the trucks – all that stuff was normal. And I loved it. To this day I sleep better on the bus than anywhere else." Above all, there was the music – though, strange as it seems, Shooter never thought of it as something he himself would ever do. "I remember hearing Dad's band," he says. "They were always great. I loved the way those shows felt, with the colored lights coming on. I can still really see him onstage, starting 'Luckenbach, Texas.' Night after night, I'd watch from the wings. But I never put two and two together, like, 'Maybe I'll get older and do this too.'"
Without thinking about it much, Shooter started making music anyway. By age five he was playing drums. Between tours, back in Nashville, he took piano lessons, didn't like them, stopped, then started teaching himself and enjoying it more. He picked up his guitar at fourteen and hasn't put it down since. He and his dad recorded a few things together when they happened to have some microphones set up and the tape recorder plugged in. Then at sixteen he discovered rock & roll.
Driven by a sound he heard coming together in his head – something like Lynyrd Skynyrd mutating into Guns N' Roses – Shooter left a couple of years later to seek his fortunes in L.A. "I had to get out of Nashville because I didn't feel it was my place at the time," he explains. "I wanted to get out while I was young. I wanted to play rock, and if I'd tried to do that in Nashville a lot of expectations would have been laid on me. I wasn't comfortable with that, so after I got out of high school, I was gone."
In L.A., Shooter assembled a band and named it Stargunn. For six or seven years they tore up the local clubs, built a rabid following, earned raves from the local music press … but something was wrong. "I loved rock," he explains. "I loved its 'f-you' attitude. But that Hollywood thing started to get to me. The more I went to all these crazy Paris Hilton parties, the more I was like, 'Man, this sucks!' I felt like everybody I'd known back in Nashville was looking at me like I was some big Hollywood asshole. I was posing as a rocker – a country guy trying to be something he wasn't." As this sank in, Shooter remembered one of the many lessons of life his father had passed down to him. "The most important thing he ever said to me was, 'Don't ever try to be like anybody else, because you ain't never gonna be.' Then one day I was trying to describe what I wanted in this one song, and I said something about David Alan Coe, and everybody was like, 'Who?' That's when I realized that about 75 percent of my story wouldn't work with this band."
On March 30, 2003, Shooter dissolved Stargunn and went to New York City to spend some time with his girlfriend and sort out what he wanted to do next. It took just a few weeks for Fate to show up, as it often does, with an opportunity, in the form of an invitation to play at the House of Blues in May. "I was certainly not ready," he remembers, "but I said yes just to inspire my ass to get a
band together and try. We did that show, and it wasn't terrible, but it was enough to pump me up and get me to start writing the songs I wanted to write."
Once he had his material together, Shooter went back to L.A., found some musicians who could connect to his true, new sound, dubbed them the 357s, and locked himself into a studio with them. Six weeks later they emerged with Put the ‘O’ Back in Country, a set of rambunctious country that leaves no doubt of where Shooter comes from and where he's going. "In country music I feel completely free to do what I want to do," he insists. "I still get off to a lot of what's going on in rock – the White Stripes are great and so is Velvet Revolver. I almost feel like real rock & roll is more present in country than it is in rock. You wouldn't hear 'Keep Your Hands to Yourself' on rock radio now. It'd be on country radio, because you can't bullshit country fans; they know authentic music when they hear it. And that's what I'm out to do." Not only that – Shooter does it with a sound that's nourished by tradition, that acknowledges his family, and yet is entirely his own. "In my head, I still wish I sounded like a Waylon record from 1978," he laughs. "But I know I sound like myself. I guess that comes from finally doing what I want, even though I'm embracing my heritage too. That's important in country music. Somebody asked me once if it's hard living in my father's shadow. Hell, no – it's great! I love my father's music. In fact, I want a Waylon song on my next record. But PUT THE ‘O’ BACK IN COUNTRY is all me, coming out fast, balls to the wall."
Shooter is already on his way, a shooting star on the rise. His duet with Hank Williams, Jr. was a highlight of CMT's Outlaws special in the fall of 2004. "Please Carry Me Home," which he wrote and recorded with his mother for the anthology Music Inspired by the Passion of the Christ, moved Todd Sterling of Country Review to observe that "Shooter has the same soulfulness in his voice as his late father." Meanwhile, his big-screen debut, playing his father opposite Joaquin Phoenix's Johnny Cash, promises to be a highlight of next year's biopic WALK THE LINE. All well and good, but no matter where Shooter Jennings'instincts lead him, PUT THE ‘O’ BACK IN COUNTRY points right to the heart of who he is. "My whole statement is about the music," he insists. "It's about not being afraid to cross any boundaries. It's about freedom. And I know that the people in that little place between New York and L.A. called America will come, as long as the music is real."

I dont think this does any good cause everybody who listens to shooter probably has every record already! i know i do!

Shooter Jennings 04/17/2008

Amanda

I absolutely, 110%, no-doubt-about-it LOVE Shooter Jennings!!! I hope one day I will get to meet him.

Shooter Jennings 04/12/2008

tracy

i think shooter should go on nabster radio and give them his superstar's favorite mx. cause he is a superstar; the f**kin world just doesn't know it yet

Shooter Jennings 04/12/2008

tracy

shooter is the f***in boss. his mx always makes me feel better. it's down home and kicks it. he also looks like he has a big package. toby keith is hot too. and johnny depp. i must need to get l**d.

Shooter Jennings 03/10/2008

MISS TX

i actually love this cd!
Tangled Up Roses is an automatic classic

Shooter Jennings 02/04/2008

csu ramFS

im givin it 5 stars because the computer wont let me give it anything "higher." ill tell you what the first time around i might have gave it a 2 because it was all over the place but the more ive listened to it (a good 16 times through) the more i love this record. you have a little bit of everything and not once is that a bad thing. southern rock, 80s hank jr country, rowdy covers, and yes even the mariachi bad came in for a few songs (old friend, she lives in color). thanks shooter...i dont know if you ready these man but if you are messing around on the internet while you are on the road just know that you got big fans in Ft. Collins, CO that love your music and this cd is your best.
--sonny lubick forever!!

Shooter Jennings 12/27/2007

KS-TX

There are a few good numbers on this cd, but compared with his previous two, this is terrible. There is no wild country rock tunes and no soulful lonesome ballads. Disappointing is an understatement.

Shooter Jennings 12/24/2007

Jim Beam

You guys don't get it, Shooter is one of the few that can totally change his sound. In this albums, you've got a bit of Skynyrd, a bit of Hank Jr (take it easy buddies ! i don't say he's almost big as Bocephus, i just say you can heard some of his sound!)a bit of Waylon, a bit of rock'n'roll, and a lot of Shooter! Thats a damn good album, a storyfrom the start to the very last sound of that album...

Shooter Jennings 12/04/2007

Jon

This CD is odd. He goes back and forth too much between old and new. I think he is better doing the hard edgier stuff he did in his previous albums. I'll pass on this one.

Shooter Jennings 11/15/2007

somebode

I think he needs to make his mind up on what he wants to sound like. I think this album sucks